Corliss Williamson added 22 points and rookie Michael Stewart
tied a career high with 13 for the Kings, who also established
season highs for points, points in the first quarter and
assists. They also won their team-record eighth consecutive
game at Arco Arena.

"We've been playing well at home so we came in with a lot of
confidence," said Stewart. "We had a little payback in mind
because we lost to them last week in Toronto on a last second
shot and we thought that was a game we probably should have won.
So we just came in here, played well and came out with a win."

Sacramento's previous season high for scoring came in a 115-89
rout of Orlando on November 12th.

John Wallace scored 18 points, Carlos Rogers added 12 and Damon
Stoudamire chipped in with 11 for Toronto, which had won its
last four games by a combined 15 points.

"The Kings are very tough at home to beat," said Raptors coach
Darrell Walker. But when you shoot 39 percent, you can't win
either. We have to get this one out of our system. They jumped
on us and we could never get back in the game."

Sacramento put the game away early, beginning a 33-11 spurt with
just under three minutes gone in the first quarter on
Williamson's jumper that forged a 4-4 tie. Willamson followed
with a three-point play by dunking over Marcus Camby, and
Anthony Johnson made it 11-4 with consecutive jumpers.

Doug Christie briefly stemmed the tide for the Raptors with a
three-pointer, but Richmond hit back-to-back three-pointers for
a 15-7 advantage. Christie made a jumper but the Kings ran off
the next nine points. Stewart connected on two jumpers and
Richmond hit a three-pointer and a short jumper to make it 24-9.

"Not to take anything away from them, but we played a good
ballgame tonight," said Johnson. "Mitch was making shots,
Corliss was getting out on the break, as a team we were playing
really well tonight."

The Kings led 35-15 after one quarter, their most points in the
first period this season and the lowest output for Toronto.

"The first quarter really told it all," said Kings coach Eddie
Jordan. "We came out with a lot of focus, a lot of energy.
Tonight we were able to take care of things we didn't in
Toronto. We took care of the pick and roll and the rebounding."

Midway through the third quarter, Mitch Richmond, who made five
three-pointers, hit three straight from beyond the arc and
Johnson followed with another three-pointer to build a 78-50
cushion with 7:59 left in the quarter.

Johnson, who scored 13 points, had seven of Sacramento's
season-high 40 assists while comitting no turnovers. Olden
Polynice had nine rebounds for the Kings.

Rookie Tracy McGrady and Shawn Respert also had 11 points apiece
for the Raptors.

Toronto shot percent (39-of-100) from the field and was
outrebounded, 50-39. The Kings hit on 56 percent (49-of-87) of
their field goals, including 8-of-18 three-pointers.

In a 99-98 victory over Sacramento on January 21st that started
Toronto's streak, Stoudamire -- playing amid persistent trade
rumors -- came within one rebound of a triple-double, tying a
career high with 36 points.